CINEMATIC REVELATIONS allows me the luxury of writing, editing and archiving my film and television reviews. Some reviews appeared initially in "The Commercial Dispatch" and "The Planet Weekly" and then later in the comment archives at the Internet Movie Database. IMDB.COM, however, imposes a limit on both the number of words and the number of times that an author may revise their comments. I hope that anybody who peruses these expanded reviews will find them useful.

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Sunday, March 3, 2013

"The Last Exorcism" (**** OUT OF ****) amounts to something more than
the abysmal "Blair Witch Project." This above-average, 87-minute,
Lionsgate release doesn't rely entirely on wobbly camera movements for its
impact. Indie Teutonic director Daniel Stamm lenses the action as if it were a
straight-forward documentary. Meantime, a sense of irony permeates this unobtrusive
epic that isn’t entirely apparent on initial viewings. The chief difference
between "The Last Exorcism" and "The Blair Witch Project"
is its sophistication that I missed when I saw it the first two times. Stamm
employs the cinema vérité camera style when he wants you on the edge of your
seat. Mind you, nothing scary happens up front. Audiences who crave blood and
gore may feel cheated. Just when you think you might see something
bloodcurdling, Stamm cuts away to a reaction shot of people looking at what you
want to see. Any shots in "The Last Exorcism" that would have
required blood and gore as well as slashed up body parts were omitted. In one
scene, the demon-possessed girl kills an angry white cat, and its remains look
like a heap of bloody rags. Rated PG-13, "The Last Exorcism" uses the
single-camera approach to accentuate its suspense and the tension.Nevertheless, Stamm spawns a surfeit of suspense
and tension by playing it cool. "The Last Exorcism" does pale by
comparison with the mother of all exorcism movies "The Exorcist" and
lacks a tenth of "The Exorcist's" impact. Meantime, Stamm and his scribes create some
genuinely creepy atmosphere in the remote backwoods settings where "The
Last Exorcism" occurs and many of the home-grown performers are convincing,
especially Patrick Fabian as a minister who is having a crisis of faith.This one point eight million dollar film was
a success, earning over $40 million domestically.

Indeed, "Broken Condom" scenarists Huck Botka and Andrew Gurland
establish the character of the protagonist, Reverend Cotton Marcus of Baton
Rouge, Louisiana, as a sympathetic fellow who wants to expose exorcism as a
scam. In Cotton's own words, he doesn't want to read about another unfortunate
adolescent dying because an exorcist wrapped a bag around the child's head in
his zeal to oust a demon. Cotton (Patrick Fabian of "Must Love Dogs"),
has been preaching since he was knee high to a pulpit. He comes from a long
family line of preachers who also served as exorcists. His father, Reverend
John Marcus (John Wright, Jr. of "Waiting Room"), has performed 150
exorcisms, and Cotton carried out his first exorcism when he was age ten.
Cotton's father owns a 'who's who' of all the demons. He keeps this vintage
leather-bound volume written in Latin locked up in an office safe.
Nevertheless, Cotton isn’t entirely happy with his career as an exorcist and he
wants to atone.

Like the religious figures in all exorcist movies, Cotton is
wrestling with his conscience about what he has done in the name of God. Cotton
confides in us that exorcisms are more popular now than ever. He brandishes a
newspaper article about an exorcist academy that the Vatican has instituted to
help combat the scarcity of exorcists. He makes his agenda clear from the beginning. "What I want to do is expose exorcism for the scam that it really is, and that's why we're doing this. So if I can help expose it for what it really is and save one kid from having a plastic bag wrapped around his face that sounds like God's work." Cotton has a pile of exorcism requests
stacked up on his desk. He selects an 'urgent' letter at random. A single-parent,
Louis Sweetzer (Louis Herthum of "In the Electric Mist") of Ivanwood,
Louisana, who believes his 16-year-old daughter, Nell Sweetzer (Ashley Bell of
"The Truth about Angels"), is afflicted with demonic possession. Of
course, Cotton thinks all the poor girl is suffering from is schizophrenia.
Louis shows Cotton a disemboweled cow in his barn. When Cotton talks to Nell,
he finds some disturbing artwork, but he believes he can handle this case with
relative ease.

Unfortunately, Reverend Marcus finds himself in a bigger predicament.
Initially, he conducted an exorcism—that he faked with a magician's finesse—and
everything went off without a hitch. Nell recovered. Cotton counted Lewis'
money. Cotton and his camera crew left the premises to spend the time in a
motel. Cotton didn't tell the Sweetzers where they were checking in for the
night. Imagine Cotton's surprise when Nell shows up at their motel. He carries
Nell to the local hospital, and they discover Nell is pregnant. When Louis
learns the truth, he swears that a demon has raped his virgin daughter.
Earlier, Louis' oddball son, Caleb Sweetzer (Caleb Landry Jones of "No
Country for Old Men"), had told Cotton that his father was a drunkard.
Predictably, Cotton suspects Louis may have raped his daughter. Meantime, Louis
demands that Cotton perform another exorcism. Louis is fully prepared to kill
his own daughter with a shotgun to save her immortal soul if Cotton refuses.
Cotton and his camera crew find Nell's latest art work, and the unseen
photographer doesn't like the idea that he is depicted in the picture as a man
without a head. At this point, things really begin to twist and turn.

The genius of "The Last Exorcism" lays in its superb sense of irony.
The first-act is flawless as we watch Cotton prepare his charade.By the second and third acts, you realize
this is more than just another found footage flick and that Cotton is battling
more than simple superstition. This movie wallows in its own sense of irony
because Cotton refuses to believe in demons. Since he rejects demons, Cotton
has lost his faith. Indeed, he presents an expose of his own exorcism and
demonstrates how he uses a sound system to frighten his clients. A local
minister and his obese wife serve as comic relief, but "The Last
Exorcism" doesn't conjure up many laughs because it is so powerful. Stamm knows
how to generate suspense, without calling attention to his real agenda. This chiller
boils down to a compelling an expose about a non-believer who confronts the
reality of a world he abhors. "The Last Exorcism" succeeds as a memorable
exercise of terror because the filmmakers shun blood and gore so we cannot take
our eyes off the exorcism.